112 OUTLINES OF BRITISH FUXGOLOGY. 



fuscous, fleshy, convex, then flattened, depressed, clothed 

 with woolly filaments ; stem hollow, attenuated down- 

 wards, clothed like pileus ; gills ad fixed, ventricose, broad, 

 brown-fuscous. 



In woods. On naked soil. Coed Coch. Taste bitterish- 

 sweet. 



594. A. (Inocybe) deglubens, Fr. ; pileus 1^—2 in., at 

 first brown-rufescent, then yellow, slightly fleshy, convexo- 

 plane, obtuse, or obtusely umbouate, adpressedly fibrillose, 

 fibrils separating ; flesh white ; stem solid, slender, ad- 

 pressedly scaly-fibrillose, pale, darker with pruina at apex ; 

 gills obtusely adnate, ventricose, distant, grey, then 

 cinnamon. 



In moist woods. Rare. 



595. A. (Inocybe) obscurus, P. (p. 154); 1-2 in. 



59G. A. (Inocybe) Rennyi, B. and Br. ; small ; pileus 

 fawn-coloured, centre brown, hemispherical ; stem atten- 

 uated downwards, fibrillose. 



Hereford. 



111. lliMOSi. — Pileus loiKjitudinally Jihrous, soon cracked; stem 

 irhUish, fibrillose ; many species become yelloio when old. 



597. A. (Inocybe) schistus, Cke. and Sm. ; pileus 

 2-3 in., obtusely campanulate, broadly sub-urabonate, bay- 

 brown, cracking longitudinally, rather fibrillose ; stem 

 stout, equal, twisted, solid, paler than pileus ; gills adnate, 

 with a decurrent tooth, rather broad, rufescent with a pale 

 serrate margin. 



On lawns. 



598. A. (Inocybe) flbrosus, Sow. (p. 154) ; o in. 



599. A. (Inocybe) perlatus, Cke. ; pileus 3-4 in., 

 fleshy, convex, then expanded, broadly umbonate, longitu- 



